Category Archives: Trips and Travels

Down on the farm….

Last weekend, I jetted out to Peoria, Illinois (yes, they do have jets that go there) to spend a few days on a farm in Elmwood, IL.  I have to start by saying that I could never live there, but what a great place to visit!  I stayed at Karen & Rocky Hudson’s family farm that’s been in Rocky’s family for four generations (a rare thing these days).  They grow corn and soybeans (the two most popular crops in this country).  One of the cool things about the place is that their house literally sits in a cornfield – so it’s a regular suburban-type house with a green lawn, above ground swimming pool, but it’s literally surrounded by a field of corn stalks 10 feet or higher.  So you sit in the back garden, swinging on a hammock under a tree and you’re looking at huge stalks of corn.  It was too cool!

We were joined by two other farmers and spouses - Terry and Linda Spence from Missouri (they raise cattle) and Chris and Christi Petersen from Clear Lake, Iowa.  Karen, Terry and Chris used to be consultants for the GRACE Factory Farm Project, which I managed years ago, but they’re now off doing their own thing, and I’ve gotten swallowed up with my Sustainable Table and Meatrix projects – but it was so great to spend a few days with them all.

And I bet you’re wondering what we did….

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From Bonnaroo to Boulder

Have you ever had that perfect trip?  The one where everything just seems to fall into place and everything goes perfectly, even with hiccups and all?  Well, that was “From Bonnaroo to Boulder” for me – and it was a work trip to boot!

My program Sustainable Table had a booth at Bonnaroo, the four-day music festival in Manchester, Tennessee – four glorious days in the hot stinking sun (and I hate the sun) – but we met so many amazing people and had such a great time that it was all perfect.  You can read all about it on the Sustainable Table Tour Journal - we (my colleague Dawn and I) journaled our way across half the country.

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Sedona and back

I’m so bad! I spent the month of May working from Arizona – the Village of Oak Creek part of Sedona to be exact – made a post or two, and then got so into my time there that I didn’t post anything else!

Well, to sum it up, it was an amazing month. The flowers were in bloom (I’ll get photos up some day…); the weather was perfect and ranged from the 40s to the 90s, even had rain and clouds (I love the variety) – and, most importantly, I had time to hike at least once a day and spend a lot of time outdoors among the red rocks and the beautiful blue sky. Oh, and have a little time to hang out with the locals….


A couple friends came out to visit while I was there. We found a great biker bar in Jerome, an old mining town turned art colony, where we hung out one Sunday afternoon with a live band and a lot of cool people. We also went to the Martini Bar in Sedona one night – there was an amazing live band of local musicians playing – and we ended up having drinks with two of John McCain’s secret service agents. It was one of those great nights where you meet almost everyone in the place.

I also found a couple new spots to hang out and relax – Schnebly Hill Road pull off (there are picnic tables there) and the rocks on Oak Creek right across Red Rock Crossing Park.

I’ve come back to NYC relaxed and with a lot of things in perspective – fingers crossed it stays this way!

Wild Beasts in AZ!

So, I’m out here in Arizona, just doing my thing – working (way too hard, as usual), hiking every day, getting some sun. I had to get up early this morning for a radio interview (that never happened…), but I’m at the kitchen table in the condo I’m renting, do some proofing work at about 5:45am.

I look out the patio door and there was a flippin’ wild beast in the backyard. I’m not joking! (No, it’s not the jackrabbit in the photo – I saw him later in the evening…)

I was pretty sure it was a Javelina – a boar-like wild animal found in these parts. It looked boarish, and it was an animal I’d never seen before. I just found this video at the Arizona Wildlife website – this is the beast in my garden….

And I didn’t see a small one – he had to be 60 pounds – the back garden is small – no more than 10 feet of grass. He seemed to take up the whole thing! I’m going to see if I can get up early every so often and try to get a photo of him if he comes back. Maybe I’ll name him! And I’ll certainly be more careful if I go outside early in the morning – apparently, they like to go around in packs, and they can attack if provoked.

I’ve got 2 roadrunners that live in the back hedge – I’ve named them Fred and Ethel. They’re always running around together – one chasing the other. They’re like an old married couple.

And I just went for a walk early evening (6pm-ish) at Bell Rock – on my way back, it was getting a bit dark, and I saw something that looked like a jackrabbit or a cross between a fox and a rabbit. I just checked the National Geographic site - he was a jackrabbit (which is actually a hare, not a rabbit).

And I’ve seen hummingbirds and lizards and I even saw a huge snake fly across the highway yesterday. I’ve never seen a snake move, and this thing slithered so fast it was unbelievable! Today, I took my work and went down to the river – it’s only a couple miles from where I’m staying. It was so beautiful – I come in on the other side of Red Rock Crossing and sat on the rocks. Last time I was there, I saw an otter in the water, which was cool (though a bit scary because I was on my own….) I think that’s why I’m so happy I wasn’t really afraid to see the jackrabbit – startled, but not afraid. If I see a Javelina on the trail, I will crap my pants. That thing would have terrified me. But I’m not used to so much wildlife, so this is great!

It’s a whole new world!

 

Sedona sunshine…

I have the great fortune to be working from Sedona the month of May. I came out here to see if working away from the office would be as (or more) productive as working there, and to see if I might want to move here. I think after Day 3, I’m not going to move here. I could see me coming back like this – to spend a month or two – but I don’t think I could live here permanently. It’s great to come and stay in a nice hotel and be all pampered – it’s another thing to be living in a condo and having to do the usual cleaning, chores and work. It’s not quite the same getaway….

Yesterday, I took my first walk to my rock (Bell Rock); today, I climbed her. Or tried to climb her. She stopped me part way up. There’s one part where you have to go up basically using your hands and feet – why in the world I listened to some midwestern tourist is beyond me but she’s telling me exactly how to get up. Well, I start up the boulder face and really started to panic because I got stuck. I couldn’t find the next foothold up and started slipping down.

I wouldn’t have killed myself but I didn’t want to crack my head or break an ankle. I had enough sense to get myself to calm down asap – I don’t know much about hiking, but I do know if you panic, you can be in real trouble. So, I was able to turn around and get my butt down so I could find a place to put my feet. It was probably extremely comical to watch….

I then walk over another 10 yards or so and see the spot I used last time to get
up the boulder thing. Argh!

It’s incredibly beautiful here right now – desert flowers are blooming, the sky is deep blue, and it’s a perfect temperature. I’m already beet red from the sun!

Yesterday, I went to an event hosted by Sustainable Arizona – they had a local wine, cheese and bread tasting at a vineyard between Cottonwood and Camp Verde (meaning, not far from Sedona….) It was a beautiful place and wonderful event – met some really nice people – but almost everyone was from New York or had lived there for a while. I can’t believe how many ex-New Yorkers live out here.

Well, tomorrow’s a work day – it feels so odd to be here working. I’m used to doing things like getting a massage….

I have a few photos of Bell Rock and my temporary “office” on Flickr here – http://www.flickr.com/photos/dianehatz/2469523541/in/set-72157604906798226/

 

Alp Yodels

Not even two weeks after returning from India, I headed out to Switzerland to a friend’s wedding. He’s Tibetan and lives in India, but married a lovely woman from Switzerland, where the ceremony was held.

You have to love the Swiss! They are clean. They are neat. They are efficient. They are on time! And did I mention neat and clean? My hotel was spotless – this is the German part of Switzerland so they had that minimalist, straight line, spotlessy clean air about them. Oh, it was such a joy after India!

The wedding was lovely. I went on my own and got a little tired after the fifth person I met exclaimed – You came alone??? To Switzlerand? To a wedding? You must be sooo lonely. No – I’m not. I’m a New Yorker. This is what we do….

I stayed in the town of Winterthur, just outside Zurich. I had hoped to have lunch on an Alp, but just couldn’t do it. (The Alps proper are a couple hours from Zurich.) Winterthur is nice but is on the suburban side and doesn’t have much vibe. Cute place – don’t know if I’d go back there though.

My last day there, I went into Zurich. After a few days in Winterthur, Zurich was electric! I was there a couple years ago for Dalai Lama lectures so I was a little familiar with it – but had forgotten how beautiful it was. And I found out later it was the first warm sunny day this year – and it looked like the entire population of Switzerland came out to Lake Zurich. Zurich sits on a lake – the buildings there are beautiful; it’s very cosmopolitan, and the lake is gorgeous. At the far end are Alp-like mountains, which you can’t always see because of cloud cover, but they were out (I didn’t get to see them before) – so it was a perfect day.

I went to the Modern Art Museum there (best in Switzerland) and saw a couple Salvador Dali paintings I hadn’t seen before. (I love Dali also.)

Anyway, it was a wonderful trip; I ate too much chocolate; the wedding was lovely, and I’m so glad I went.

 

Holy India!

I always said the only reason I’d go to India would be because of The Dalai Lama – I’ve never been drawn to it, and, to be honest, have always been rather intimidated and even scared at the prospect, having been brought up in a different culture and all.

But – and I really don’t know how this happened – I got invited to a small, private teaching by The Dalai Lama – two of them actually. 150 people, 8 days. In Delhi. I couldn’t say ‘no’. There was no way anything would keep me from something like this. So, with much trepidation, but a lot of excitement, I flew the 15 hours to land in place about as far away from what I was used to as I could get….

The teachings by His Holiness were amazing – there’s not much I can say in words about them except that I now know I am one of the luckiest people in the world. This is an experience I’ll never forget – and I was even able to introduce myself and ask him a question.

But the real story for here was my time in India. Thank goodness my friend Arthur picked me up at the airport when I landed – there were all these men outside the airport trying to get my bags and load them in a car so they could get a tip. Everyone wants a tip. That was handled easily. I get to the hotel probably around 11 at night and need money. No ATM in the hotel that I can use (why would a hotel that caters to foreign tourists only have an ATM that Indians can use?…) so I had to walk down the road to a gas station. If I hadn’t been so jetlagged I probably would have thought twice about that, but I did, and got a little money to tip and all that.

I stayed at a hotel called the Ashok – it’s government run, and I was warned by friends Heather and Paul (who happen to live there in Delhi) that it was like Faulty Towers. I get to my room – not even close to the 5-star hotel that the place says it is. It’s okay – well, until I get into bed, pull back the bedspread and see a blood stand on the sheet and underside of the spread. I was too tired to call so did it the next morning (don’t say anything…). But housekeeping didn’t care. I get back from breakfast and the room is still being cleaned – I asked the attendant (they’re all males) if the spread and duvet had been changed because of the stain, and his whips off the spread to uncover the stain now at the other end. All he did was move the covers around. I made them change it right away!

As he’s getting clean bedding, I notice that under the bed, it’s not just dirty, there’s trash there. I’m horrified and force them to vaccuum it immediately. I figure at this point, it’s okay – I didn’t want to risk another room and the same problem. And I’m in the renovated section of the hotel!

The first full day I was there, I get a call from another friend Heather (who was staying with Delhi but former NY Heather) – the other Heather is former NYC also but now working for the UN and living in Afghanastan. Heather’s in town to do some shopping so she lets me tag along, jet lag and all. I have to say, I tried to prepare myself for it all, but I wasn’t. It started with the 3 or 4 year old beggar child that lived on the street and was covered head to toe in dirt and muck – he wouldn’t let me pass. I was so horrified he was going to touch me and give me some kind of disease, and then I felt so horrible for thinking that of a small child. India really makes you think.

That was followed up a little later by the woman with an infant at her breast, clawing and banging on the car window, almost crushing her baby against the glass. I’m right there on the other side, freaking. What do you do? Everyone says don’t give them any money – but there they are starving to death and living in dirt on the side of the road. It rips at your soul.

The topper for this trip was this old man in white, with his walking stick that came hobbling over to the car because I sort of caught his eye. (Don’t look out the windown in Delhi and catch any of the beggars eyes – they’ll be knocking on your window in a flash – trust me, it happened to me more than once.) He had a tin can attached to the top of it and his Hindu god taped on the inside. Again, he comes up to my side of the window, which is partly open. He starts pawing at the window. I notice his hands are bandaged in white – then notice he has no fingers from his knuckles down, Afghan Heather says, “oh, that’s a leper.” I freaked! A toothless leper with no fingers was pawing at my window, inches from my face. And I had to ignore it. It makes you question your own humanity and compassion. I know people in New York who are begging can get help – there are a lot of organizations that will provide food. I don’t think these people in Delhi get much help. Heather said that it’s the culture and their class system and not to feel sorry for them – it’s just the way it is – but when you come from the West and have never experienced anything like this, how can you not freak to some degree?

Then there was the day I went for a walk on my own. I’d been at the hotel at the teachings for a couple days. We ended early one day (it was the last day of the first set of teachings)and I just had to get out and walk somewhere. Living in New York, I’m used to walking everywhere and not thinking twice about it. But the guidebooks and people told me not to go out on my own. But I couldn’t stand being couped up any longer so went across the street to a shopping area for lunch – which was fine – but then decided to walk up what looked like a nice big wide road.

So off I go. Now, remember, India is a patriarchy. Huge patriarchy. Like maybe 50 or more men out to every woman (which is huge progress I was told). It’s so bad that one day when I read the paper, I saw two articles about mother-in-laws that had doused their daughter-in-laws with kerosene and lit them on fire because the girls’ families weren’t continuing to give enough money for their dowry. And this was in Delhi!!!

So I start up the road. And the honking starts. And then I see men start to appear from nowhere and stare at me. They start coming across the street. Some young Hindi kid – maybe 17 or 20 – comes up behind me and says stuff in Hindi in my ear. It was soooo disgusting! These men were all walking toward me – so I turned around and got back to the hotel as soon as I could! No more walking on my own! (Okay – I did it again later but went to a safe place where only one greaseball appeared out of nowhere next to me – I told him to f-off and he disappeared.) So, you have to know where you can go there. Touristy areas are fine. I was obviously somewhere else.

And then the topper of it all! I was there for almost two weeks, so toward the end of my hotel stay, I was getting used to everything. I got leered at by the men in the shops in the hotel, the attendants on my floor were always knocking on my door and looking for tips – it got so annoying they got way less of a tip than they otherwise would have, I got horribly sick from the Indian spices so spent all my meals at 5 star hotels eating western food, and on and on. Oh – want to hear something unbelievable? You can actually rent a car and a driver for an entire day in Delhi for the same amount of money that a glass of wine costs! Can you believe that? That’s how little labor is valued there.

But back to my last day in the hotel. I get out of the shower, am half dressed, and come out the door to see a man up in my ceiling vent with a flashlight! I’m not joking – there was a small Indian man up in my ceiling above me! I freaked. And I made them knock off some of the bill at the end. I’d heard an explosion the night before (at this point, my comment was – how India – and went back to sleep) – and the hotel manager told me that the man was up there fixing the air conditioning, but don’t you think a 5-star hotel would inform their guest if someone was going to be in the ceiling on top of them????? Ah! – how India!

So – if you ask me my impression of India – it’s loud, hot, in your face, aggressive, too male oriented, dirty – but that’s Delhi. People told me that other places are beautiful so I can’t judge an entire country on one city, but, if you are planning to go to Delhi, DO NOT STAY AT THE ASHOK!!! Unless, of course, you want to wake up to find your own man in the ceiling. I will only go back to Delhi if a teaching like this with The Dalai Lama happens again, and I won’t spend another minute there!

And, to be fair, I had a great time – I’m telling you the bad, weird, surreal things that happened. I met great people, did some good shopping, liked the other 5 star hotels we went to – so it wasn’t a bad experience at all. Just totally eye opening – and it really will rock your world and shake you to the foundation if you’re not used to third world countries. (I’ve never been out of the west before…) So – it was a great experience – just don’t know if I need that particular one again….

PS: Oh, and I forgot to mention the noise. Besides the heat, starvation and pollution, Delhi is SOOO loud. People honk their horns nonstop, 24 hours a day. It’s one thing to have people yelling and hawking their wares, but the horns! There’s a horn for hello, I’m on the left, I’m on the right, I’m passing, what are you doing!, danger – look out! – there are horn blows for everything you can think of – and it just doesn’t end. It’s sound all pervasive that I didn’t actually notice it until I got back to Manhattan – I had no idea how quiet Manhattan is!!! It was sooo quiet there compared to Delhi. And there aren’t cows in the road. Oh, yes, there are still cows walking around the middle of the highways in Delhi….

 

Sedona, my getaway place…

I’m starting to put up photos I have into my Flickr account so thought I’d put up a few from Sedona and give you a link into Flickr to look at the rest of them. I have to warn you, though – there are a lot of rocks!

Path to Bell Rock
I don’t know why I love Sedona so much, but I’m physically pulled to the place and the rocks. I never even knew I liked rocks so much until I went there! I think it’s probably the most beautiful place I’ve ever been to. I like it so much that I’m even thinking of getting a condo there, which means I’ll need to start spending more time there, so another trip might be coming soon. (The photo on the right is Bell Rock – one of my favorite rocks that’s considered to be a very powerful vortex. I love to sit up on the other side of it – the next photo here is the view from my spot on the rock….)
View from my rock

I went a couple times after having meetings in LA – it’s only a 7-hour drive from LA, and once you’re out of the LA traffic nightmare, it’s quite enjoyable. (I cut off the interstate just after crossig into Arizona.) I try to stay at the Sedona Rouge while there – it’s not cheap, but it’s a lovely place and the beds are soooo comfortable. It’s a spa also, and a lot of women go there on their own so I feel comfortable there – and because I’ve stayed several times, I get treated really well.

Heaven....
Hopefully, I’ll be able to spend a little time there in the early part of 2008. It’ll all depend on work stuff – I’m waiting to see if some projects come through. If they do, I might not be able to go – if a big project doesn’t come through, I might try to work from Sedona for a while. We’ll see…..

I have three sets of photos from Sedona up on Flickr – May 2006, November 2006, and September 2007.